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Common Hawk-cuckoo (Cuculus varius) - Wiki
Subject: Common Hawk-cuckoo (Cuculus varius) - Wiki
Common Hawk-cuckoo (Cuculus varius) India-Brainfever or Brain-fever Bird.jpg
Resolution: 423x844 File Size: 54906 Bytes Date: 2007:03:05 09:55:16 Upload Date: 2007:10:26 17:19:05

Common Hawk-cuckoo (Cuculus varius) - Wiki


Common Hawk-cuckoo
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

[Photo] Common Hawk-cuckoo (Cuculus varius). Taken by Flickr User http://www.flickr.com/photos/nidhingpoothully/ Source http://www.flickr.com/photos/nidhingpoothully/411018577/

The Common Hawk-cuckoo Cuculus varius also popularly called the Brainfever bird is a medium sized cuckoo resident in South Asia. It is called a Hawk-cuckoo because of its resemblance to the Shikra hawk. It is a brood parasite, laying its eggs in foster nests.

Distribution
From Punjab, Pakistan east across most of the Indian peninsula from about 800m in the Himalayas south; Bangladesh; Sri Lanka. Resident and locally migratory.

Habitat: Found in dry deciduous forests. mostly singly.
Local Names: Kapak, Upak, Papiya (Hindi); Bharao (Mirshikars, Bihar); Chokgallo (Bengal); Kutti pitta (Telugu); Zokkhat (Deccan); Bappaiyo (Gujarati); Shikra kuyil (Malayalam); Ukusu Koha (Sinhala).

Description
Size: about Pigeon (ca. 34cm). Slenderer than pigeon, with longer tail
Appearance: Ashy grey above; whitish below, cross-barred with brown. Broadly barred tail. Sexes alike. When flying into trees, they resemble sparrowhawks (Shikra and upon landing on the perch they shake their tails from side to side.

During summer months, the call is easily detected by its repeated calls : a loud, screaming dee dee dit, repeated with monotonous persistency 5 or 6 times, rising in crescendo and ending abruptly. This in its various interpretations provides alternative names: brain-fever (English) or pee kahan (Hindi, "where's my love") or chokh gelo (Bengali, "my eyes are gone") and paos ala (Marathi, "the rains are coming"). Heard all through the day and frequently during moonlit nights. Common Hawk-cuckoos feed on hairy caterpillars and other insects, berries and wild figs, etc.

Nesting
Like other cuckoos, this species is a brood parasite, preferring babblers. It's breeding season is March to June, coinciding with that of Turdoides babblers. A single egg is laid in each nest, blue, like that of the host. Hatchling reared to maturity by foster parents.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_Hawk-cuckoo
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English perch
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